Art Lost In AI Animation

The Ravi Varma paintings come to life! Thanks to AI and technology!

This has been circulating on the WhatsApp circuit. From a technological point of view, it is an impressive use of AI—bringing still images to life with a sense of movement.

Yet, when viewed purely as art, something of the original essence seems to be lost.

When Raja Ravi Varma created such paintings, there would have been careful consideration behind every element—the proportions, the expressions, the brushwork, and the overall balance of the composition. His work often captured a moment in time, one that invited quiet contemplation.

Light, in particular, was not merely incidental; it was integral to the subject itself.

In the process of animation, many of these subtleties tend to fade. The stillness that holds the viewer is replaced by movement, and with it, the contemplative quality is altered.

To a purist, this may feel like a departure—perhaps even an intrusion into something complete in itself.

And yet, there is another way to see it.

What we are witnessing here may not be art in the traditional sense, but an exploration of new creative possibilities through technology. It opens up a different kind of engagement—one that belongs to our times.

Perhaps the question is not whether one is right and the other wrong, but whether we can recognise the distinction between the two.

Painting of a woman in a red saree interacting with a swan, inspired by Raja Ravi Varma’s style
When stillness becomes motion—art reinterpreted through technology

If you wish, you may explore the Rodevra website

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